toniogarces1988
Salud!
Hi all, looking for a pH meter and I see prices range from as cheap as 16 to over 100 and more dollars. Any insight? Will a 20 dollar meter do for checking ph of mash?
$12 meters are hit or miss I have a couple and one is damn accurate when compared to the Milwaukee 102 we use and have to recalibrate every single time we use it... when we run out of calibration solution or get results we question we use the cheap red one to back it up. IMO you might go through a few meters but if your looking to get your mash in the correct range the cheap meters are fine one you find one that works .. if your looking to do lab work or .01 accuracy they are not the way to go.Hi all, looking for a pH meter and I see prices range from as cheap as 16 to over 100 and more dollars. Any insight? Will a 20 dollar meter do for checking ph of mash?
I also have the same meter and like it. I use it alot as I grow using a hydroponic setup and check the ph every day on that. I also liked that it has a carrying case. CheersI have the Apera PH60 which seems pretty popular around here.
https://www.amazon.com/Apera-Instru...00/dp/B01ENFOIQE?ref_=bl_dp_s_web_14574843011
I find it does what I need and calibrates pretty painlessly. Not cheap but worth it so far in my opinion.
Also a good point. cheersAn inportant question I Guess should be asked is if your like many home brewers who have made what you consider good beer without one but want to improve on that and are looking for something to tell you whether your just in that 5.2-5.6 range or are you someone whos going to be striving for a specific mash ph of say 5.34 where a mash of 5.32 or 5.36 is completely unacceptable?
To me the expectations and attention to required maintenance are going to make all the difference here..
Hi all, looking for a pH meter and I see prices range from as cheap as 16 to over 100 and more dollars. Any insight? Will a 20 dollar meter do for checking ph of mash?
I'm just trying to make sure I'm within the right mash ph range so that my beer can be improved. I already make what i consider to be tasty beer, but I'm interested in water composition and ph as the next step in my journey. Just another fun thing to play with and make better a more controlled beer as a result. I do like precision, but can live with being in the range.An inportant question I Guess should be asked is if your like many home brewers who have made what you consider good beer without one but want to improve on that and are looking for something to tell you whether your just in that 5.2-5.6 range or are you someone whos going to be striving for a specific mash ph of say 5.34 where a mash of 5.32 or 5.36 is completely unacceptable?
To me the expectations and attention to required maintenance are going to make all the difference here..